tea aside.
“All right then, all right.” She held her hands out to the fire. “Clear for me and let me see, through the smoke and into the fire, take me where the light desires.”
Images in the flames, voices through the smoke. Branna let herself drift toward them, let them pull her, surrendered to the call she’d felt in the blood, in the bone.
When they cleared, she stood in a room where another fire simmered, where candles flickered. Her cousin Brannaugh sat in a chair singing softly to the baby at her breast. She looked up, her face illuminated, and said, “Mother?”
“No.” Branna stepped out of the shadows. “No, I’m sorry.”
“I wished for her. I saw her when my son came into the world, saw her watching, felt her blessing. But only that, and she was gone. I wished for her.”
“I asked the light to take me where it willed. It brought me here.” Branna moved closer, looked down at the baby, at his down of dark hair, and soft cheeks, his dark, intense eyes as he suckled so busily at his mother’s breast.
“He’s beautiful. Your son.”
“Ruarc. He came so quick, and the light bloomed so bright with his birthing. I saw my mother in it even as Teagan guided him out of me and into the world. I thought not to see you again, not so soon.”
“How long for you?”
“Six days. We stay at Ashford, are welcome. I have not yet gone to the cabin, but both Teagan and Eamon have done so. Both have seen Cabhan.”
“You have not.”
“I hear him.” She looked toward the window as she rocked the baby. “He calls to me, as if I would answer. He called to my mother, now to me. And to you?”
“He has, will again, I imagine, but it will do him no good. Do you know of a cave, beyond the river?”
“There are caves in the hills, beneath the water.”
“One of power. A place of the dark.”
“We were not allowed beyond the river. Our mother, our father both forbade it. They never spoke of such a place, but some of the old ones, at gatherings, I heard them speak of Midor’s cave, and would make the sign against evil when they did.”
“Midor.” A name, at least, Branna thought, to work from. “Do you know of Cabhan’s origins? There is no word of it in the book, in Sorcha’s book.”
“She never spoke of it. We were children, cousin, and at the end, there was no time. Would it help to know?”
“I’m not sure, but knowing is always better than not. I was there, in a dream. With Fin. Finbar Burke.”
“Of the Burkes of Ashford? No, no,” she said quickly. “This is the one, the one of your circle who is Cabhan’s blood. His blood drew him to this place, and you with him?”
“I don’t know, nor does he. He is not Cabhan, he is not like Cabhan.”
Now Sorcha’s Brannaugh looked into her own fire. “Does your heart speak, cousin, or your head?”
“Both. He’s bled with us. You saw yourself, or will on Samhain night. And you will judge for yourself. Midor,” she repeated. “The light brought me here, and it may be for only this. I’ve never heard of Midor’s cave. I think this may be buried in time, but I know how to pick up a shovel and dig.”
They both looked toward the tall window as the howling rose up outside.
“He hunts and stalks.” Brannaugh held her son closer. “Already since we’ve come home a village girl’s gone missing. He pushed the dark against the windows, swirls his fog. Beware the shadows.”
“I do, and will.”
“Take this.” Shifting the baby, she held out her hand, and in it a spear of crystal clear as water. “A gift for you, and a light.”
“Thank you. I’ll keep it with me. Be well, cousin, and bright blessings to you and your son.”
“And to you. Samhain,” she murmured as Branna felt herself pulled away. “I will tip my arrows with poison, and do all in my power to end him.”
But you won’t, Branna thought as she sat in front of her own fire again, studying the crystal in her hand. Not on Samhain.
Another time, gods willing, but not on Samhain.
She rose, tucking the gift into her pocket. Choosing her laptop over the books, she began to search for Midor’s cave.
• • •
“I COULDN’T FIND A BLOODY THING THAT APPLIED TO THIS.” Branna sat, poking at the salad she’d made to go with a pretty penne